--> Abstract: Microseismic Monitoring of a Fractured Reservoir in Oman Undergoing Steam Injection, by S.S. Busaidi, S. Mahrooqi, F. Clow, O. Harrasi, T. Urbancic, and A. Baig, #90188 (2014)
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Previous HitMicroseismicNext Hit Monitoring of a Fractured Reservoir in Oman Undergoing Steam Injection

S.S. Busaidi1, S. Mahrooqi1, F. Clow1, O. Harrasi1, T. Urbancic2, and A. Baig2

1PDO
2ESG

Abstract

A Previous HitmicroseismicNext Hit network was installed over a fractured heavy oilfield in Oman. The multi-array Previous HitmicroseismicNext Hit network was designed for long term monitoring of cap rock integrity, tracking steam chamber progression, identifying both fault creation/reactivation and possibly any local state of stress. More than 3,300 Previous HitmicroseismicNext Hit events have been located from April, 2011 to May, 2013. In addition to the basic processes of locating the events, interpreting those locations relative to the picked faults, correlating the Previous HitmicroseismicNext Hit event rate with steam injection rate, temperature rise and oil production, advanced processing can reveal much more information contained within the Previous HitmicroseismicNext Hit records. The adequate spatial coverage of this Previous HitmicroseismicTop network allows Source Moment Tensor Inversion (SMTI). The SMTI provides valuable insight on how the rocks are deforming, failure mode mechanisms (opening, closing, sliding or tearing mechanism), and the orientation of the individual fracture in terms of their strike and slip direction and the stress-strain direction, from which we can identify a global stress regime and any local stress anomalies.

 

AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90188 ©GEO-2014, 11th Middle East Geosciences Conference and Exhibition, 10-12 March 2014, Manama, Bahrain